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Aug 10, 2013
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there are programs like the telephone metadata program. the idea is help to connect when there is a foreign threat that may have a domestic nexus. how does it work? this program is about the book-- bulk collection of telephone metadata. what that means is things like numbers dialed, date and time of call, and duration of call. it does not include any subscriber-identifying information. there are no names identified. there is no locational data provided, whether gps data or location information. there is no content. as to how it is implemented, pursuant to court order, the data comes to nsa on a daily basis. it needs to be put in a segregated database. it cannot be mingled with other data at the end of the day. it has strict access and use controls. let me walk through some of those. >> you talked about transparency. this is called the 215 program, because of the provision in the patriot act. you were in congress when they passed the patriot act. did you understand, when you voted for and supported the patriot act, that it would be used for
there are programs like the telephone metadata program. the idea is help to connect when there is a foreign threat that may have a domestic nexus. how does it work? this program is about the book-- bulk collection of telephone metadata. what that means is things like numbers dialed, date and time of call, and duration of call. it does not include any subscriber-identifying information. there are no names identified. there is no locational data provided, whether gps data or location information....
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Aug 8, 2013
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and the date stamp and the postmark. >> would you have people believe that metadata have no significant privacies? i would rather if i had a choice, i hope not have either of these choices, of having every phone conversation i have for 30 days listening to them which, of course, is impractical to have a large number of people doing that, or all my metadata collected for 30 days? i would much rather -- >> collected by proctor and gamble oracle victoria beckham corporation, then i would be worried. and i think sometimes we don't really think about who is really, what is the real privacy problem in this country? and i'm not so sure it's with your federal government. i think it may be more without this data is used in the private sector for marketing and other kinds of purposes. my metadata information available for people who want to target me for their sales pitches and anything else. marketing strategies and so forth. that's not what this is being used for. they could care less. >> let me say, seriously, that i believe that we, those of us who were senior officials in the intelligence co
and the date stamp and the postmark. >> would you have people believe that metadata have no significant privacies? i would rather if i had a choice, i hope not have either of these choices, of having every phone conversation i have for 30 days listening to them which, of course, is impractical to have a large number of people doing that, or all my metadata collected for 30 days? i would much rather -- >> collected by proctor and gamble oracle victoria beckham corporation, then i...
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is mass collection of our metadata is unconstitutional so there's going to be someone on this end n.s.a. outsider review panel who's an outsider and actually cares about civil liberties well then it's peter swire unfortunately it's only peter swire because the rest are very clearly former national security and intelligence officials and then there's cass sunstein in his fairly radical views about cognitive infiltration now this is a credibility problem for the white house because the more cynical among us already dismissed this idea of an n.s.a. review board knowing full well that review boards are d.c. speak for kick the can down the road and now that we actually know who's sitting on this review board well it just proves the cynics are probably right in washington sam sachs r.t. . but it's not only domestic issues regarding n.s.a. spying the spying that the president is dealing with currently he has also need to keep in syria's civil war as aggression in the country escalates secretary of state john kerry delivered a speech less than an hour ago saying that the u.s. has little doubt t
is mass collection of our metadata is unconstitutional so there's going to be someone on this end n.s.a. outsider review panel who's an outsider and actually cares about civil liberties well then it's peter swire unfortunately it's only peter swire because the rest are very clearly former national security and intelligence officials and then there's cass sunstein in his fairly radical views about cognitive infiltration now this is a credibility problem for the white house because the more...
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s collection of american citizens phone metadata and bulk this review will specifically look at improper or illegal uses of surveillance granted under section two fifteen a different focus than the clapper established review board the f.b.i. is the domestic partner of the n.s.a. when it comes to snooping on u.s. citizens. elsewhere newark mayor cory booker won the democratic primary in new jersey in the new jersey senate race with a huge margin on tuesday the victory propels booker into the special election on october sixteenth but have recent n.s.a. surveillance concerns played any role in this election or will they in any upcoming elections political commentator sam sachs reports so cory booker won big last night and he's likely to be the next senator from new jersey but this election is important for another reason it was the first national attention grabbing election in which the surveillance activities of the n.s.a. were in issue they were made that way by congressman rush holt who when he learned of the n.s.a. leak said screw it and introduced a bill in the house to repeal everythi
s collection of american citizens phone metadata and bulk this review will specifically look at improper or illegal uses of surveillance granted under section two fifteen a different focus than the clapper established review board the f.b.i. is the domestic partner of the n.s.a. when it comes to snooping on u.s. citizens. elsewhere newark mayor cory booker won the democratic primary in new jersey in the new jersey senate race with a huge margin on tuesday the victory propels booker into the...
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>> the revelations about the magnitude the scope and kale of these surveillances, the metadata and the invasive actions surveillance of social media websites were indeed revelations to me. now, the senate of the united states has an intelligence committee which operates much of the time in secret, ron widen, senator widen my colleague has actually made speeches on the floor of the senate saying the american people would be outraged. i'm paraphrasing, dissatisfied or frightened. i can't tell you why if they knew about these rulings. we may need to relook at some of the procedures for oversight and scrutiny. >> here's the question to you, is the last month many the news about surveillance and privacy and secrecy, has it been a net benefit to american democracy? is it better that we now know what we did not know a month to six weeks ago? >> i'm concerned about the damage that may have been done to our security. and i'm going only by what i've heard in public, today's testimony being an example from the intelligence community or officials in that community. so the potential danger or damag
>> the revelations about the magnitude the scope and kale of these surveillances, the metadata and the invasive actions surveillance of social media websites were indeed revelations to me. now, the senate of the united states has an intelligence committee which operates much of the time in secret, ron widen, senator widen my colleague has actually made speeches on the floor of the senate saying the american people would be outraged. i'm paraphrasing, dissatisfied or frightened. i can't...
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Aug 12, 2013
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i have fairly -- [inaudible] on the collection of metadata. i am am not a supporter of the collection of metadata in the way they are doing identity -- doing it right now. where there are opportunities for abuse and humans involved, there will be abuses. and i think if you look at the bill of rights and you look at the fourth amendment, it's very easy to think, well, they're violating the constitution. but if you look at the law which is maryland versus smith in 1979, it was a case that stated that there should be no expectation of privacy if there is a collection of the pen registry, and that is the numbers, essentially, from the phone company. so you have a constitution, and you have a law that's sort of at variance with each other right now. what i would say is that i would feel much more comfortable, and i think those who have sort of a libertarian streak would be more comfortable if we just had the phone companies hold the data for five years, the government pays to hold that data, and when we want to go into the data, you've got to have
i have fairly -- [inaudible] on the collection of metadata. i am am not a supporter of the collection of metadata in the way they are doing identity -- doing it right now. where there are opportunities for abuse and humans involved, there will be abuses. and i think if you look at the bill of rights and you look at the fourth amendment, it's very easy to think, well, they're violating the constitution. but if you look at the law which is maryland versus smith in 1979, it was a case that stated...
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Aug 4, 2013
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i think they are collecting more than metadata. i believe they are collecting some sort of content. >> we have to wrap it up but when it comes down to it, as a hacker who has the ability to go in and break into things, right? what are we most at risk? what do we need to do to protect ourselves? >> you know, what you could do, if you are not targeted by sophisticated hacker you can do the normal stuff of having anti-virus software but it's if you are a real target of a sophisticated guy all these anti-virus software and software to find malicious programs is ineffective. the industry has not created products that are meaningful and effective in stopping a sophisticated hacker. they are stopping the guys who are going after the low-hanging are going after the low-hanging fruit. -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com >>> you are in the cnn news room. we are awaiting the official word of the professional fate of alex rodriguez. even though major league baseball is being quiet about their decision to suspend the star infielder, multiple
i think they are collecting more than metadata. i believe they are collecting some sort of content. >> we have to wrap it up but when it comes down to it, as a hacker who has the ability to go in and break into things, right? what are we most at risk? what do we need to do to protect ourselves? >> you know, what you could do, if you are not targeted by sophisticated hacker you can do the normal stuff of having anti-virus software but it's if you are a real target of a sophisticated...
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Aug 18, 2013
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problem is not the nsa programs but the president's inability to explain the complex task of collecting metadata. others say it needs oversight, whether the court or congressional. >> they understand the separation of powers. checks and balances are supposed to come from independent branches of government. he thinks that if he gets some lawyers together from the nsa and they do a power point presentation, tell him everything is okay, that the nsa can police themselves. >> fully disagree with senator rand, that was a grab bag of misinformation and distortion coming from him. the fact of the matter, take rand paul's own numbers. says billions of phone calls are collected. that's not true. assume he is right, billions of phone calls collected. put that with 2800 violations, self reported by nsa, which did not violate anyone's rights. >> the nsa defending its tactics as americans learn the agency overstepped authority on thousands of occasions. the white house reacting, saying in part while the majority of incidents were unintentional, the agency is monitoring and addressing compliance incidents. >>
problem is not the nsa programs but the president's inability to explain the complex task of collecting metadata. others say it needs oversight, whether the court or congressional. >> they understand the separation of powers. checks and balances are supposed to come from independent branches of government. he thinks that if he gets some lawyers together from the nsa and they do a power point presentation, tell him everything is okay, that the nsa can police themselves. >> fully...
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Aug 22, 2013
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today it's "the wall street journal" reporting that it's not just metadata they are grabbing from our e-mails but the content, the actual stuff you write. now the obama administration late today has declass fade a previously secret court ruling which chastises the nsa for screwing up even more. quote, mishandling as many as tens of thousands of unrelated and purely domestic communications collected on u.s. soil and without warrants. the court also says it is troubled that this represents, quote, the third instance in less than three years in which the government has disclosed a substantial misrepresentation regarding the scope of a major collection program. and, even better, by which i mean this isn't any better, new investigative reporting it from nbc news today, one seriously sobering new detail about that whole story is that even now, more than two months after he started leaking about the nsa to the press, the nsa has no idea what data they took from him, how many documents he took, or what the documents are. the nsa has, quote, poor data organization and poor audit capability and
today it's "the wall street journal" reporting that it's not just metadata they are grabbing from our e-mails but the content, the actual stuff you write. now the obama administration late today has declass fade a previously secret court ruling which chastises the nsa for screwing up even more. quote, mishandling as many as tens of thousands of unrelated and purely domestic communications collected on u.s. soil and without warrants. the court also says it is troubled that this...
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Aug 9, 2013
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allows the government to collect phone metadata; adding a privacy representative to the foreign intelligence surveillance court; releasing the legal rationale for collection of data and appointing an n.s.a. representative committed to privacy, and inviting outside experts to review how the government does its surveillance. the measures come as the administration has faced mounting scrutiny over its surveillance programs following the leaks from former spy agency contractor edward snowden. mr. obama was asked if today's move changed his mindset about snowden. >> is he now more a whistle- blower than he is a hacker, as you called him at one point, or somebody that shouldn't be filed charges? and should he be provided more protection? is he a patriot? >> i don't think mr. snowden was a patriot. as i said in my opening remarks, i called for a thorough review of our surveillance operations before mr. snowden made these leaks. my preference-- and i think the american people's preference-- would have been for a lawful, orderly examination of these laws; a thoughtful, fact-based debate that would th
allows the government to collect phone metadata; adding a privacy representative to the foreign intelligence surveillance court; releasing the legal rationale for collection of data and appointing an n.s.a. representative committed to privacy, and inviting outside experts to review how the government does its surveillance. the measures come as the administration has faced mounting scrutiny over its surveillance programs following the leaks from former spy agency contractor edward snowden. mr....
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Aug 21, 2013
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>> you know, we had this happen before, several months ago on the metadata program, it became aware of that. i wrote a letter to the president and asked for an explanation and a hearing. that day, thankfully, they did that, and many senators gathered in a room to listen. that same day, details came out about the prison program. >> i have a lot of concerns, but at a minimum, i think we should, as soon as we get back from recess, we should have a briefing that is detailed that explains all the programs that are happening, how we do those things to try to ensure these kinds of things that have been revealed don't happen. i think it's very pervasive. candidly, as i mentioned already, with so much happening, you wonder if there's any way to have appropriate oversight over these programs. >> that's one of the roles of congress. were you aware and other members of congress aware of this? >> so i think, you know, members of committees, some are more active than others. i'm not on the intelligence committee, but it was very apparent to me sitting in this briefing, there were some senators that
>> you know, we had this happen before, several months ago on the metadata program, it became aware of that. i wrote a letter to the president and asked for an explanation and a hearing. that day, thankfully, they did that, and many senators gathered in a room to listen. that same day, details came out about the prison program. >> i have a lot of concerns, but at a minimum, i think we should, as soon as we get back from recess, we should have a briefing that is detailed that...
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Aug 11, 2013
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important and right questions in this discussion which he turned and said hey, how do we know this metadata, we have heard reports that it is more accessible than people think, other agencies are using it, and the representatives -- and this is not to disparage -- i'm not sure the answer is to that. it is not because representative king does not know, but it is because the fear among most conservatives or liberty minded folks -- sometimes as we should be a nation of laws or when people have the wrong assets -- access, people do things with data that they should not otherwise do, and a blake and check of trust it sometimes is difficult to give. we live in a world of incredible threat. if one city knows it and understand that, it is new york city, and that is what makes discussions like this so important. the veterans organization, what we hope to do and be able to do is come into the discussion with an understanding, a fundamental understanding of that threat. but also a believe in the liberty and freedom we fought for, and if you give it all away in securing yourself, you lost the country t
important and right questions in this discussion which he turned and said hey, how do we know this metadata, we have heard reports that it is more accessible than people think, other agencies are using it, and the representatives -- and this is not to disparage -- i'm not sure the answer is to that. it is not because representative king does not know, but it is because the fear among most conservatives or liberty minded folks -- sometimes as we should be a nation of laws or when people have the...
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warrants, but when they are interpretations of section 215, like that interpretation that led to the metadata program. that's where it's worth while for the court to hear another voice. i maybe statute tore changes may be needed. right now the chief justice picks all those people. i think it ought to be senate confirmed. >> we know that john kerry has been pressed on that during some travel it is in south america. are you concerned that these programs present a long-term problem for our international interests? >> they certainly do provide a lot of complications in terms of our international relations. some of it is played out well below the surface, because some of this is partners in europe have their own programs they don't want to talk about and fee freel to talk -- and not talk about what their own intelligence agencies do. some of the countries are the biggest beneficiaries of the intelligence work we do when we're able to share with them. if there's a threat in madrid or london or berlin, so they often benefit from the intelligence work we do, but yes, in other countries, it is certain
warrants, but when they are interpretations of section 215, like that interpretation that led to the metadata program. that's where it's worth while for the court to hear another voice. i maybe statute tore changes may be needed. right now the chief justice picks all those people. i think it ought to be senate confirmed. >> we know that john kerry has been pressed on that during some travel it is in south america. are you concerned that these programs present a long-term problem for our...
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republican just in amman one of the authors of the proposal to defund the national security agency's metadata collection program that was narrowly defeated in the house of representatives last month i started my conversation with congressman conyers by asking him about his number one legislative priority as a michigan representative jobs. you have said that your number one legislator purty right now is jobs h.r. one thousand can you tell us about this well essentially of all the things that i would love to accomplish as a thought or legislator would be to create an economy where everybody's working. for a number of reasons obviously a person who is working is the person who is going towards some kind of fulfillment he's sustaining him so or her so. it's also good for the national economy. because it helps move us more quickly out of this recession that we've been working your way. it's also important in that it provides. for lot of people. hell in terms of small businesses being able to maintain themselves or for people to actually go into small business that's a very big chunk of our economy
republican just in amman one of the authors of the proposal to defund the national security agency's metadata collection program that was narrowly defeated in the house of representatives last month i started my conversation with congressman conyers by asking him about his number one legislative priority as a michigan representative jobs. you have said that your number one legislator purty right now is jobs h.r. one thousand can you tell us about this well essentially of all the things that i...
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president is certainly reflecting a level of discoll fo -- discomfort of a broad nature of the telephone metadata program which is under 702 and he had an hour and a half meeting with senator durbin and that meeting last and a hour and a half with a bipartisan group speaking to him about the ways to narrow the number of years that the telephone records are kept or whether some other record keeping should keep place external to the government. >> right. >> what do you as a former intelligence officer think about the discomfort that the comma commander in chief clearly has and that members of congress now have? >> look. i was in the white house, and in late september of 2001 with president bush saying to me, mike, anything more that you can do and i said not within my current authorities, mr. president, and he said, that is not the question i can ask you, and is there anything that you can do, i went back and said, yes, additional things to do, and yes, andrea, that is 12 years ago almost, we realized that we were changing the box, because frankly, the circumstance of threat had changed. i continue
president is certainly reflecting a level of discoll fo -- discomfort of a broad nature of the telephone metadata program which is under 702 and he had an hour and a half meeting with senator durbin and that meeting last and a hour and a half with a bipartisan group speaking to him about the ways to narrow the number of years that the telephone records are kept or whether some other record keeping should keep place external to the government. >> right. >> what do you as a former...
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>> i'm analyzing glenn greenwald's metadata. >> follow my instructions. are you ready? turn on your computer. >> it's already on. >> oh, you're a good kid. now, listen to me very carefully. i need you to hack a website. >> yes! i've been waiting for this moment. thank you so much. >> your youthful exuberance is wasting precious time. now, i'll give you the information. all right, where are we? >> jeez. >> have you hacked the site? >> yes, i hacked the site. >> was your cover blown? >> no. >> is the data i mentioned still there? >> yes, the data is all here. >> read me the data. >> dear henry topple, thanks for opening an account with geocities.com, the world's leading e-mail provider now and forever. >> yes, yes. >> your password is password123. >> password123. i've been trying to remember that for years. >> anyway, not a great recruiting video for aspiring nsa agents. >>> anyway, it was the queen's speech. but luckily, it was one she never had to make. documents released by the uk government today included a contingency speech prepared for queen elizabeth ii which was
>> i'm analyzing glenn greenwald's metadata. >> follow my instructions. are you ready? turn on your computer. >> it's already on. >> oh, you're a good kid. now, listen to me very carefully. i need you to hack a website. >> yes! i've been waiting for this moment. thank you so much. >> your youthful exuberance is wasting precious time. now, i'll give you the information. all right, where are we? >> jeez. >> have you hacked the site? >> yes, i...
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Aug 9, 2013
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. >> what we're talking about here is the government's phone data collection program, the so-called metadata program. couple things about that. this paper says that the foreign intelligence court has approved this program 34 times, 14 different judges. it makes clear that one thing that's been sort of confusing out there that the program does not gather location information, in other words it can't tell where a call was made from like a cell phone when it's traveling around. and the second thing that i thought was interesting about it is that it allows the government to look into this database when they get a suspect number, and to go from there three hops out from that number, by which i mean this. when they get a suspect number, they can go in and they can look at what calls that number has made, then as they look at that second ring, they can look at what calls that second ring made, and then they can look at the third ring and what calls that third ring has made. so that clarifies what they can do when they get what they call a seed, a single number, to start to look at. now, there's one
. >> what we're talking about here is the government's phone data collection program, the so-called metadata program. couple things about that. this paper says that the foreign intelligence court has approved this program 34 times, 14 different judges. it makes clear that one thing that's been sort of confusing out there that the program does not gather location information, in other words it can't tell where a call was made from like a cell phone when it's traveling around. and the...
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Aug 1, 2013
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before the senate hearing for the white house to release the documents that ordered verizon to turn over metadata. he and senator blumenthal will interview legislation today. and a third extension has been filed to for google and microsoft to release details on what fisa asked them to do. the u.s. and pakistan have agreed to mend fences and try to reestablish full partnership. we are back with more show for you after the break. stay with us. ♪ cenk off air>>> alright in 15 minutes we're going to do the young turks! i think the number% 1 thing than viewers like about the young turks is that were honest. they know that i'm not bsing them for some hidden agenda, actually supporting one party or the other. when the democrats are wrong, they know i'm going to be the first one to call them out. cenk on air>> what's unacceptable is how washington continues to screw the middle class over. cenk off air>>> i don't want the middle class taking the brunt of the spending cuts and all the different programs that wind up hurting the middle class. cenk on air>>> you got to go to the local level, the state leve
before the senate hearing for the white house to release the documents that ordered verizon to turn over metadata. he and senator blumenthal will interview legislation today. and a third extension has been filed to for google and microsoft to release details on what fisa asked them to do. the u.s. and pakistan have agreed to mend fences and try to reestablish full partnership. we are back with more show for you after the break. stay with us. ♪ cenk off air>>> alright in 15 minutes...
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well, guess what all of these metadata -- all this information about who's calling who. it's big data. it's terabytes, a huge amount of data. the question is, we can't use human intelligence to review that. but what's happening and what's going on in nsa and other places is the developing algorithms and other things to be able to analyze it, not looking at a particular thing but looking for patterns, looking for things that would be helpful, which is not an invasion of privacy, it's an analyzing of something that is, again, enormous amount of data trying to find patterns to see if we can draw conclusions from it. i don't see that as interfering with anybody's privacy. i see that as using the technology that everyone else is going to be using. >> is it a concern, joy ann, that we entrust the government to, you know, stay away, not bother us with stuff when they're look for terrorists, but the fear is, until such a time that they might have a different point of view, a different imperative, and they've got all this data, and that makes a lot of americans uncomfortable at a
well, guess what all of these metadata -- all this information about who's calling who. it's big data. it's terabytes, a huge amount of data. the question is, we can't use human intelligence to review that. but what's happening and what's going on in nsa and other places is the developing algorithms and other things to be able to analyze it, not looking at a particular thing but looking for patterns, looking for things that would be helpful, which is not an invasion of privacy, it's an...
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Aug 20, 2013
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they keep other sorts of metadata on your calls. they have been doing this for quite some time. it was recently disclosed. the problem of course is that they're doing it with out any suspicion. it is not matter whether you have a connection to a terrorist or not. doherty tohe it gather up everyone's data. this violates the fourth amendment. you cannot go around collecting collected -- without any suspicion. i've been fighting this for the past couple of months. we had ans ago amendment on the house floor. 200 and five members of wegress stood up and said do not approve of the nsa collecting the phone records of every single person in the united states without any suspicion. unfortunately, 217 members said they were ok with it. i think the tide is turning. i think things are shifting as we hear more things in the news about what the nsa and government is doing. we have heard other reports about how it might be sharing information with eda -- dea and irs. according to reports, they incidentally collect your information, inadvertently collector information, and then use that inform
they keep other sorts of metadata on your calls. they have been doing this for quite some time. it was recently disclosed. the problem of course is that they're doing it with out any suspicion. it is not matter whether you have a connection to a terrorist or not. doherty tohe it gather up everyone's data. this violates the fourth amendment. you cannot go around collecting collected -- without any suspicion. i've been fighting this for the past couple of months. we had ans ago amendment on the...
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to be captured in that metadata. there's a reference in what's been heard to the enemy, not specific, which leads people to think it's probably the u.s., but could also be western europe. finally, there's some indication that what makes this so scary is that the chatter is going back and forth in part between al qaeda in yemen and core al qaeda which is loosely based still in pakistan, the tribal areas, afghanistan, maybe even the top figure in al qaeda now with bin laden gone, amman zawahiri. this looks scarier than some of the chatter they pick up. >> put this in a perspective over the past ten years, let's say. it used to be we heard of the chatter going on around the clock. we had a discussion yesterday on "meet the press" about the about of al qaeda to still strike, compared to five, six, seven, ten years ago. is this the world our intel community live in constantly five years ago, six years ago? this is just news now because there's a re-emergens of chatter the likes of which we haven't heard in five or six yea
to be captured in that metadata. there's a reference in what's been heard to the enemy, not specific, which leads people to think it's probably the u.s., but could also be western europe. finally, there's some indication that what makes this so scary is that the chatter is going back and forth in part between al qaeda in yemen and core al qaeda which is loosely based still in pakistan, the tribal areas, afghanistan, maybe even the top figure in al qaeda now with bin laden gone, amman zawahiri....
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Aug 24, 2013
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one of the topics was the nsa and their search of the american e-mail and the compiling of metadata about the phone calls of americans. collects relations have come to light recently that there were times when the line was crossed. that demonstrates that those mechanisms were in place and the court ruling that that program was unconstitutional in 2011 and setting it aside and ending it was another example of how the process works. we have to continue to focus on striking that balance. >> missile controversy seems to have done something that a lot of people were not thought possible. that is forging a common ground between the libertarians and the liberal side of the democratic party. you get a sense that this is going to be the kind of the finding issue going forward that may be, say, the iraq war was? >> i do not have a sense that this will be a defining issue in that way. as is particularly because unlike the iraq war, where president bush was in office and very affirmatively differed with the democratic base and with face of the entire country where most americans felt that with the wr
one of the topics was the nsa and their search of the american e-mail and the compiling of metadata about the phone calls of americans. collects relations have come to light recently that there were times when the line was crossed. that demonstrates that those mechanisms were in place and the court ruling that that program was unconstitutional in 2011 and setting it aside and ending it was another example of how the process works. we have to continue to focus on striking that balance. >>...
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Aug 21, 2013
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it's called metadata. basically it's data about the data. they can collect the phone number of and serial number of those phones. they can note the time of the conversation. web searches and who you e-mail is also collected but not the contents of those e-mails. according to edward snowden it's happening all day every day. martha: a suspect this custody after charging into a georgia elementary school with an assault rifle. as these terrified children run out into decatur, georgia. fortunately a school employee managed to talk him down as police moved in they say 20-year-old michael brandon hill shot at them. nobody was hurt. as you can imagine, the parents were terrified have you * we didn't know anything. they kept saying turn around, turn around. i got out of the car and tried to walk. once they told us the kids were okay, go to walmart we could get the kids there. martha: look at these smiling kids coming back in the school bus. these parents feared it could be like newtown. on that day 26 students and employees were shot and killed. the
it's called metadata. basically it's data about the data. they can collect the phone number of and serial number of those phones. they can note the time of the conversation. web searches and who you e-mail is also collected but not the contents of those e-mails. according to edward snowden it's happening all day every day. martha: a suspect this custody after charging into a georgia elementary school with an assault rifle. as these terrified children run out into decatur, georgia. fortunately a...
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Aug 8, 2013
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it would not be the contents of the call but they metadata, ever is on your phone bill. then they will put -- they will do that for every drug case in the united states and take that information and put it into the database. a guy across the border was caught with $100,000 and would not say anything. inside his fund, they found four numbers and ran the numbers and it popped up with another case in the southeastern united states. they were able to put together a money-laundering and drug case together. the problem comes when these cases go to trial. it is complicated but and the defendant that goes to trial has a right to see any evidence that might be helpful or relevant to his case. defense attorneys say by systematically exporting informational like the connections made by the dice database or other wiretaps, it is unconstitutional to show -- to say we will not shared that information. host: this information came from a shoe leather type investigations? guest: for example, if the nsa intercepts information on a couple of kilos of marijuana on a boat, the nsa does not s
it would not be the contents of the call but they metadata, ever is on your phone bill. then they will put -- they will do that for every drug case in the united states and take that information and put it into the database. a guy across the border was caught with $100,000 and would not say anything. inside his fund, they found four numbers and ran the numbers and it popped up with another case in the southeastern united states. they were able to put together a money-laundering and drug case...
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Aug 18, 2013
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in the program but in the president's incompetence in explaining the very complex role of collecting metadata. >> it was not a problem. the fact is it worked. if you have 99.99% compliance and so few reporting errors, these came from an internal report that then becomes part of an overall i.g. report. i'm on the intelligence committee. i am satisfied. >> as far as leaker edward snowden is concerned, king believes the leaks have damaged our national security and he should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. gregg, back to you. >> elizabeth prann in washington, elizabeth, thank you. >> reporter: thanks. >>> breaking developments in the crisis in egypt. security sources saying that dozens of muslim brotherhood supporters have died in police custody. and there are conflicting reports on the deaths as details are still coming in, but now there is potential for more bloodshed as both the government and islamist opponents remain defiant after days of deadly clashes.vitter is live for us. >> reporter: heather, it appears right now egyptian security forces were possibly trying to move some
in the program but in the president's incompetence in explaining the very complex role of collecting metadata. >> it was not a problem. the fact is it worked. if you have 99.99% compliance and so few reporting errors, these came from an internal report that then becomes part of an overall i.g. report. i'm on the intelligence committee. i am satisfied. >> as far as leaker edward snowden is concerned, king believes the leaks have damaged our national security and he should be...
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Aug 21, 2013
08/13
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they keep other sorts of metadata on your calls. they have been doing this for quite some time. it was recently disclosed. the problem of course is that they're doing it with out any suspicion. it is not matter whether you have a connection to a terrorist or not. they have the it doherty to gather up everyone's data. this violates the fourth amendment. you cannot go around collecting the data collected -- without any suspicion. i've been fighting this for the past couple of months. a few weeks ago we had an amendment on the house floor. 200 and five members of congress stood up and said we do not approve of the nsa collecting the phone records of every single person in the united states without any suspicion. unfortunately, 217 members said they were ok with it. i think the tide is turning. i think things are shifting as we hear more things in the news about what the nsa and government is doing. we have heard other reports about how it might be sharing information with eda -- dea and irs. according to reports, they incidentally collect your information, inadvertently collector i
they keep other sorts of metadata on your calls. they have been doing this for quite some time. it was recently disclosed. the problem of course is that they're doing it with out any suspicion. it is not matter whether you have a connection to a terrorist or not. they have the it doherty to gather up everyone's data. this violates the fourth amendment. you cannot go around collecting the data collected -- without any suspicion. i've been fighting this for the past couple of months. a few weeks...
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Aug 14, 2013
08/13
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>> the irs does its own metadata collection. they could get access to a debit card and credit card transactions. there is a tax gap out there. they are under pressure to bring that money in the door. all sorts of information on the internet, on the web, to get at the underreporting. tracy: it needs the money goes under the table? >> essentially. it is that cash transactions they are trying to get at. you are not told in the letter what the dollar amount you are off by is. this s scary stuff coming out of the irs. the rates are slowly keeping up. ashley: very disturbing. thank you very much. tracy: the post office trying anything to stop red. ashley: we will be right back. ♪ >> announcer: meet mary. she loves to shop online with her debit card and so does bill, an identity thief who stole mary's identity, took over her bank accounts and stole her hard-earned money. unfortunately, millions of americans just like you learn all it may take is a little misplaced information to wreak havoc on your life. this is identity theft and no
>> the irs does its own metadata collection. they could get access to a debit card and credit card transactions. there is a tax gap out there. they are under pressure to bring that money in the door. all sorts of information on the internet, on the web, to get at the underreporting. tracy: it needs the money goes under the table? >> essentially. it is that cash transactions they are trying to get at. you are not told in the letter what the dollar amount you are off by is. this s...
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Aug 16, 2013
08/13
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well the broader information is all classified as metadata which is basically the data about your phone calls, the numbers that go back and forth but not who is calling whom. the nsa is able to collect phone numbers much people involved and cereal number about phones involved in the call and if they need to they can go back to dig deep near the phone call numbers if they need to. they can tell the length of time of the conversation and potentially the location of the participants during that phone call. web searches and who you email are also collected but not the content of those emails and according to edward snowden, he says all of that collection is happening all day, every day. bill: also the you wonder where the data is being stored. apparently at a massive facility in the state of utah. can store all the phone data gathered by nsa, including everyone's entire internet history. the 2 billion-dollars heavily fortified center has been unand running for than a year ago. it is five times the size of the u.s. capitol building. it expected to store a yata byte of data. this is one separ
well the broader information is all classified as metadata which is basically the data about your phone calls, the numbers that go back and forth but not who is calling whom. the nsa is able to collect phone numbers much people involved and cereal number about phones involved in the call and if they need to they can go back to dig deep near the phone call numbers if they need to. they can tell the length of time of the conversation and potentially the location of the participants during that...
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Aug 21, 2013
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needs of the global community while being relevant to national frameworks, deciding whether or not metadata should be included as protected information and determining issues such as how specific the language proportionality should be. at the end of the process, three core organizations -- including my own as well as privacy international and the electronic frontier foundation -- emerged as coordinators to help build awareness, secure signatories and push for the adoption and implementation of these principles in practice. to date, the principles have more than 215 signatures from around the world including human rights organizations, legal departments of universities and independent media groups. this includes 20 signatories from the united states as well as itp, the host of us here this evening, as well as free press, the electronic privacy information center and internews. this is very much civil society's effort to proactively engage with policymakers and other stakeholders in protecting the fundamental rights of all people. so i wanted to talk a little bit about the principles themselv
needs of the global community while being relevant to national frameworks, deciding whether or not metadata should be included as protected information and determining issues such as how specific the language proportionality should be. at the end of the process, three core organizations -- including my own as well as privacy international and the electronic frontier foundation -- emerged as coordinators to help build awareness, secure signatories and push for the adoption and implementation of...
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Aug 5, 2013
08/13
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don't use this as evidence that the nsa surveillance program with metadata is really responsible for getting these intercepts. some people are a little skeptical of that. >> i guess the only grumbling that i have seen or read was that, you know, that perhaps the u.s. government has overshared in this information. do you think that's the case? do you think that's a valid concern? >> well, you know, it's a concern only insofar as when you overshare, as you put it, you might be tipping some folks off that you'd like to catch. >> right. >> but i think post-benghazi, the feeling is that you can't have what they call a double standard, which is that you can't know these things, keep it to yourself, and not share it with the public that could actually be affected or hurt by these attacks. and so i think the newer strategy is to let people know what you can let them know. by the way, we still do not know the direct nature of the threat. i'm not so sure the government knows it. i think it's quite diffuse. and we don't know all the details of what the government knows. but we do know enough to
don't use this as evidence that the nsa surveillance program with metadata is really responsible for getting these intercepts. some people are a little skeptical of that. >> i guess the only grumbling that i have seen or read was that, you know, that perhaps the u.s. government has overshared in this information. do you think that's the case? do you think that's a valid concern? >> well, you know, it's a concern only insofar as when you overshare, as you put it, you might be tipping...
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Aug 8, 2013
08/13
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it would not be the contents of evercall but they metadata, is on your phone bill. then they will put -- they will do that for every drug case in the united states and take that information and put it into the database. a guy across the border was caught with $100,000 and would not say anything. inside his fund, they found four numbers and ran the numbers and it popped up with another case in the southeastern united states. they were able to put together a money-laundering and drug case together. the problem comes when these cases go to trial. and themplicated but defendant that goes to trial has a right to see any evidence that might be helpful or relevant to his case. attorneys say by systematically exporting informational like the connections made by the dice itabase or other wiretaps, is unconstitutional to show -- to say we will not shared that information. from this information came a shoe leather type investigations? nsa : for example, if the intercepts information on a onple of kilos of marijuana a boat, the nsa does not sit on the information. ory pass it o
it would not be the contents of evercall but they metadata, is on your phone bill. then they will put -- they will do that for every drug case in the united states and take that information and put it into the database. a guy across the border was caught with $100,000 and would not say anything. inside his fund, they found four numbers and ran the numbers and it popped up with another case in the southeastern united states. they were able to put together a money-laundering and drug case...
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Aug 7, 2013
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-- were you aware of the metadata operation? guest: i was not. ♪ caller: my comment is everyone is mad about the tsa, but i love them. yes, it is an inconvenience but would you rather be in the air and your plane blows up? yes, they need an overhaul of the system, but we need them. that: think you for point. you are exactly right. some people might not like to stop at red light and an intersection, but we recognize we need some way of coordinating car traffic at an intersection. right,int is exactly which is very few people would want a complete no security approach to the most threatening factor of al qaeda. there's an opportunity to make a better in terms of continued investment and professionals, to make, an opportunity the check points of the future better. those technologies are there, but we have to be willing to embrace and deploy them. they do not have some of those technologies todayonfigured into all of those facilities. they need time to do what we did after the underwear bomber, which is for were deploying more of
-- were you aware of the metadata operation? guest: i was not. ♪ caller: my comment is everyone is mad about the tsa, but i love them. yes, it is an inconvenience but would you rather be in the air and your plane blows up? yes, they need an overhaul of the system, but we need them. that: think you for point. you are exactly right. some people might not like to stop at red light and an intersection, but we recognize we need some way of coordinating car traffic at an intersection. right,int is...
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Aug 1, 2013
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a lot of metadata excess and a data base, it cannot be accessed unless you go through the procedures of documenting that there is reasonable articular of all suspicion that the phone number you want to ask about is associated with terrorists. host: reaction? guest: it is irrelevant. it is misleading as well. every time you make a phone call, every time i make a phone call, every time your listeners call into this show, the nsa gets a record of that call. that is what people are concerned about host: what is the answer? >> guest: the answer is to stop it because it is a violation of the u.s. constitution. host: our guest will be with us for the next 40 minutes and we have a democrat from florida, the ninth district. guest: we are located in south orlando. host: you previously served earlier in the eighth district from 2009-2011 and was defeated for reelection and came back camewon different district. guest: the biggest comeback in house history. i was in a district that had been republican for 34 years -- was elected in 2008. democrats lost their seats and i came back two years later
a lot of metadata excess and a data base, it cannot be accessed unless you go through the procedures of documenting that there is reasonable articular of all suspicion that the phone number you want to ask about is associated with terrorists. host: reaction? guest: it is irrelevant. it is misleading as well. every time you make a phone call, every time i make a phone call, every time your listeners call into this show, the nsa gets a record of that call. that is what people are concerned about...
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Aug 27, 2013
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google chrome knowing only about 30-40% of what has actually mapped metadata, so knowing the names of streets and all the data. much of what is not mapped. have you ever had the experience, you're going to a country in an emerging world and you look on the maps and there's a line, yes, but there's a million people there who live there and there's like two lines. where's the data? this is a tool for the people who live here draw themselves onto the map on top of the satellite imagery comes labeled a. this is what the people in pakistan did across six-month. so think, as we think about these docking challenges about education, how are we collaborate with the collective talent of the world, of the country, of the teachers, of industry, of the use of the students to do these things to cause amazing things to happen. this is the activity that's happened on that tool. across the world. people are putting themselves literally on the map. this is interesting. i got to work on the beginning of google book search and engineers had this idea come here were all these webpages you could search aga
google chrome knowing only about 30-40% of what has actually mapped metadata, so knowing the names of streets and all the data. much of what is not mapped. have you ever had the experience, you're going to a country in an emerging world and you look on the maps and there's a line, yes, but there's a million people there who live there and there's like two lines. where's the data? this is a tool for the people who live here draw themselves onto the map on top of the satellite imagery comes...